Today, the next chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee discussed his drug pricing agenda for the next term, progressive House Democrats are pushing for a vote on a "Medicare for all" bill, and ObamaCare enrollment is down from this point last year.

"I've always been an advocate for negotiated prices under Medicare, and as you know, President Trump says that he's for that, so I think that's an area where we can get agreement with the president," Pallone told reporters.

The Creates Act could be the easier of the two, since it has support from members of both parties and is smaller in scale. Still, even that bill has been delayed all year amid lobbying from drug companies.

Fewer people are signing up for ObamaCare plans this year compared to a similar period last year, according to data released Wednesday by the Trump administration.

About 1.2 million people signed up for ObamaCare plans in the first ten days of this year's sign up period, which began Nov. 1.

In the first nine days of last year's enrollment period, 1.5 million people signed up for plans -- a difference of more than 300,000.

In week two of this year's sign up period, which stretched from Nov. 4 through Nov. 10, 805,000 people signed up for coverage, compared to the 876,788 people who enrolled during a similar period last year.

Context: It's the first year since ObamaCare was passed that people don't have to pay a penalty for not having insurance. But it's also too soon to tell how much of an impact that will have on enrollment. Open enrollment ends Dec. 15.

Tom MacArthur, the Republican congressman credited for bringing ObamaCare repeal back from the dead, officially lost his reelection race Wednesday.

Andy Kim, a former national security official, said he was inspired to run against MacArthur because of his role in helping House Republicans pass a bill that would have repealed and replaced ObamaCare.

MacArthur crafted an amendment that united House Republicans behind a repeal bill.

MacArthur's defeat means New Jersey will only have one Republican congressman come next year, down from five.

Militant attacks on health-care personnel and members of the Congolese army have hindered a global response to a growing outbreak of the Ebola virus in two eastern provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Global and American health officials said at least two rebel groups were behind three separate attacks over the weekend in and around Beni, a regional trading hub in North Kivu Province. Health officials responding to the outbreak were forced to pause their efforts to track and vaccinate contacts of those infected with the virus for several hours.

"This is probably the most complex context that we've ever had to fight an Ebola outbreak before," Peter Salama, the deputy director-general for emergency preparedness and response at the World Health Organization, told The Hill in an interview. "The security situation is indeed tense and it has been there for many, many years."

The declaration gives Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries and providers greater flexibility in meeting emergency health needs created by the wildfires.

"We are working closely with state health authorities and monitoring the needs of healthcare facilities to provide whatever they may need to save lives and protect health," HHS Secretary Alex Azar said. "This declaration will help ensure that Americans who are threatened by these dangerous wildfires and who rely on Medicare, Medicaid, and the Children's Health Insurance Program have continuous access to the care they need."